vcpkg/docs/users/registries.md
nicole mazzuca 6e80675573
[docs registries] Add reference documentation (#17672)
* using registries reference documentation

* start work on "creating registries" document

also fix minor issue in "using registries" doc

* Robert's comments, continue working

* finish creating registries docs

* add links to example registries

* aupopa cr
2021-05-06 12:13:29 -07:00

135 lines
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Markdown

# Using Registries
**The latest version of this documentation is available on [GitHub](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg/tree/master/docs/users/registries.md).**
There are two parts to using registries; this documents the use side of the
relationship. In order to learn more about creating registries for others to
use, please read [this documentation](../maintainers/registries.md).
## Table of Contents
- [Using Registries](#using-registries)
- [Table of Contents](#table-of-contents)
- [`vcpkg-configuration.json`](#vcpkg-configurationjson)
- [Registry Objects](#registry-objects)
- [Registry Objects: `"kind"`](#registry-objects-kind)
- [Registry Objects: `"baseline"`](#registry-objects-baseline)
- [Registry Objects: `"repository"`](#registry-objects-repository)
- [Registry Objects: `"path"`](#registry-objects-path)
- [Configuration: `"default-registry"`](#configuration-default-registry)
- [Configuration: `"registries"`](#configuration-registries)
- [Example Configuration File](#example-configuration-file)
- [Package Name Resolution](#package-name-resolution)
- [Versioning Support](#versioning-support)
## `vcpkg-configuration.json`
From a high level perspective, everything that a project needs to define
about registries is contained in the vcpkg configuration file. In classic
mode, the configuration file lies in the vcpkg root; for manifest mode,
the file must exist next to the project's `vcpkg.json` file.
This file is named `vcpkg-configuration.json`, and it's a simple top-level
object file.
### Registry Objects
Registries are defined in JSON as objects. They must contain at least the
`"kind"` and `"baseline"` fields, and additionally the different kinds of
registry will have their own way of defining where the registry can be found:
- git registries require the `"repository"` field
- filesystem registries require the `"path"` field
- built-in registries do not require a field, since there is only one
built-in registry.
#### Registry Objects: `"kind"`
The `"kind"` field must be a string:
- For git registries: `"git"`
- For filesystem registries: `"filesystem"`
- For the builtin registry: `"builtin"`
#### Registry Objects: `"baseline"`
The `"baseline"` field must be a string. For git registries and for the
built-in registry, it should be a 40-character commit ID.
For filesystem registries, it can be any string that the registry defines.
#### Registry Objects: `"repository"`
This should be a string, of any repository format that git understands:
- `"https://github.com/microsoft/vcpkg"`
- `"git@github.com:microsoft/vcpkg"`
- `"/dev/vcpkg-registry"`
#### Registry Objects: `"path"`
This should be a path; it can be either absolute or relative; relative paths
will be based at the directory the `vcpkg-configuration.json` lives in.
### Configuration: `"default-registry"`
The `"default-registry"` field should be a registry object. It defines
the registry that is used for all packages that are not claimed by any
package registries. It may also be `null`, in which case no packages that
are not claimed by package registries may be installed.
### Configuration: `"registries"`
The `"registries"` field should be an array of registry objects, each of
which additionally contain a `"packages"` field, which should be an array of
package names. These define the package registries, which are used for
the specific packages named by the `"packages"` field.
The `"packages"` fields of all the package registries must be disjoint.
### Example Configuration File
Let's assume that you have mirrored <https://github.com/microsoft/vcpkg> at
<https://git.example.com/vcpkg>: this will be your default registry.
Additionally, you want to use North Wind Trader's registry for their
beison and beicode libraries. The following `vcpkg-configuration.json`
will work:
```json
{
"default-registry": {
"kind": "git",
"repository": "https://git.example.com/vcpkg",
"baseline": "eefee7408133f3a0fef711ef9c6a3677b7e06fd7"
},
"registries": [
{
"kind": "git",
"repository": "https://github.com/northwindtraders/vcpkg-registry",
"baseline": "dacf4de488094a384ca2c202b923ccc097956e0c",
"packages": [ "beicode", "beison" ]
}
]
}
```
## Package Name Resolution
The way package name resolution works in vcpkg is fairly distinct from many
package managers. It is very carefully designed to _never_ implicitly choose
the registry that a package is fetched from. Just from
`vcpkg-configuration.json`, one can tell exactly from which registry a
package definition will be fetched from.
The name resolution algorithm is as follows:
- If there is a package registry that claims the package name,
use that registry; otherwise
- If there is a default registry defined, use that registry; otherwise
- If the default registry is set to `null`, error out; otherwise
- use the built-in registry.
### Versioning Support
Versioning with custom registries works exactly as it does in the built-in
registry. You can read more about that in the [versioning documentation].
[versioning documentation]: versioning.md